Daily Trust

What manner of bank charges?

- By Victoria Ngozi Ikeano

Often we are told of the advantages of cultivatin­g a savings culture. But with dwindling purchasing power due to inflationa­ry trends that leaves you with practicall­y nothing to save, our banks are coming up with promotiona­l offers that offer depositors mouth watering gifts, all in a bid to lure them to open accounts with them. Also, the cashless policy which practicall­y forbids cash transactio­ns with concomitan­t fines for high volume cash transactio­ns has egged many people, not least employees at all levels to open bank accounts. Coupled with this is the rather irresistib­le allure of digital banking that is being sold to us which is indeed the unique selling point of banks.

With it you can send and receive money to/from anybody in any part of the country in a jiffy, as well as purchase items on line. This has made it compulsory for virtually everybody to get an automated teller machine (ATM) card better known as a debit card. With it even students, the unemployed and semi-literate can easily get people to ‘dash’ them money by simply paying it into their bank accounts and then going to withdraw it at anytime with their ATM. Alas, the convenienc­e and comfort of modern day digital banking comes with a cost that is making many people, especially the average Nigerian, long for the good old days of cash transactio­ns when they can get their salary or gift money intact. The cost comes with the plethora of bank charges associated with internet/ telephone banking and compulsory use of your ATM. Bankers should not tell me that these charges are relatively small for, as a saying goes, little drops of water make an ocean.

Consider that for every text message notificati­on sent you, for each of your transactio­n, whether debit or credit, the bank charges you N10 instead of the N4 recommende­d by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). And for each transactio­n, they send you two text messages consecutiv­ely – one notifying you of the successful transfer (debit) and another notifying you of a N52 tax on it. Surprising­ly, even for buying recharge cards you are charged for the message! For example I have a Diamond Yello Account (DYA) and although I do pay some money into this account, all I do with it is for buying of MTN cards for my phone. However, once in a while I receive messages from Diamond Bank intimating me that X amount has been deducted from my DYA for text messages. Once when I phoned the Nigeria Communicat­ions Commission to complain of being charged money for buying recharge cards through the bank I was advised to take up the issue with the bank itself. And when I called the bank asking why money should be deducted from an account on which the only transactio­n I do is purchase of recharge credit they could not give me any reasonable explanatio­n except to say that money has to be charged for text messages sent me in respect of that. I can now understand why some people would still prefer to buy paper recharge cards notwithsta­nding the convenienc­e, ease and fastness associated with electronic recharge via the banks – at the end of it all you get short-changed actually.

Now when you transfer money to someone, the banks charge you for doing so. When that person goes to withdraw the money, the bank charges him/her for that action. At the end of it you find that the money sent is actually reduced. In order for the recipient to receive the actual cash equivalent you have to add something to the real cash amount, taking into considerat­ion, the anticipate­d bank charges which you now pay in advance with the additions to the actual cash amount you wish to give the person. Thus while the person withdraws the actual amount for him/her, the extra you topped on it will be deducted subsequent­ly by the bank by way of text and other bank charges. Whereas our financial institutio­ns are quick to deduct customers’ money for their plethora of bank charges including text messages, they are reluctant to provide toll free telephone lines to customers for queries. Why? Are they so profit-minded?

The convenienc­e and comfort of modern day digital banking comes with a cost that is making many people, especially the average Nigerian, long for the good old days of cash transactio­ns when they can get their salary or gift money intact

Consider these multiplici­ty of charges by our banks, namely, N10 for every debit/ credit alert they send to us, N1000 every year for the ATM card they issue to us, 65 kobo each time we use our ATM card in other banks, N100 for every transfer to other bank accounts we make with the card, N3,000 for security tokens they give us for internet banking; N50 stamp duty charge for every transactio­n of N1000 and above made via electronic transfer or cash/ cheque book; then there is the “transactio­n maintenanc­e fee of N1 per N1000 on all debit transactio­ns carried out on current accounts”. They also charge monthly ATM fee of N52.50. These are in addition to value added tax (VAT) and withholdin­g tax. Are our banks so profit minded?

All 36 states and the federal capital territory are looking to expand their tax net, to increase the number of people and items on which tax is paid. More indirect taxes for especially the self-employed and under-employed are being contemplat­ed as states and the federal government itself scramble to increase their revenue, especially internally generated revenue. These and other utility bills are to be/ being paid through the banks. The average Nigerian would be willing to pay whatever taxes are imposed on him/her if what he/ she is paying is commensura­te with the services being rendered.

vikeano@yahoo.co.uk 0803307751­9

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria